The Big Butterfly Count
is on again in Britain and Northern Ireland. The 2015 Big Butterfly Count is a
census of the number of butterflies, and different butterfly species, that are
currently across the country.
A father and son are
already spending their summer holidays taking a canoe trip to 170 islands and
islets on Strangford Lough in Northern Ireland to count butterflies as part of
the Big Butterfly Count. They currently count butterflies on 10 islands a day. Cadogan
Enright – a local environmentalist and politiican – and his nine-year-old son
Cad Og expect to count tortoiseshells, peacocks, common blues, red admirals,
and meadow browns.
The British group,
Butterfly Conservation, organizes the Big Butterfly Count. It was launched five
years ago in 2010 and has become the world’s largest survey of butterflies.
More than 44,000 people participated last year. They counted 560,000
butterflies and day-flying moths across the United Kingdom. This year the count
occurs from 17 July to 9 August.
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